KEMALISM MEETS THE COPENHAGEN CRITERIA: THE ...KEMALİZM KOPENHAG KRİTERLERİYLE BULUŞUYOR:...
Transcript of KEMALISM MEETS THE COPENHAGEN CRITERIA: THE ...KEMALİZM KOPENHAG KRİTERLERİYLE BULUŞUYOR:...
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KEMALISM MEETS THE COPENHAGEN CRITERIA:
THE EMERGENCE OF NEO-KEMALISM
The Institute of Economics and Social Sciences of
Bilkent University
by
DEFNE GÜNAY
In Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS
in
THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
BILKENT UNIVERSITY ANKARA
September 2005
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To my parents
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I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate, in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of Master of International Relations. Asst. Prof. Dr. Ali Tekin Supervisor
I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate, in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of Master of International Relations. Prof. Dr. Yüksel İnan Examining Committee Member
I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate, in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of Master of International Relations. Asst. Prof. Dr. Aylin Güney Examining Committee Member
Approval of the Institute of Economics and Social Sciences Prof. Dr. Erdal Erel Director
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ABSTRACT
KEMALISM MEETS THE COPENHAGEN CRITERIA: THE EMERGENCE OF
NEO-KEMALISM
Günay, Defne
M.A., Department of International Relations
Supervisor: Asst. Prof. Dr. Ali Tekin
September 2005
Turkey’s long-drawn-out journey came to another turning point after
getting 3 October 2005 as a date for the launch of accession talks with the European
Union. This decision made by the Union on 17 December 2004 was an upshot of
huge steps taken by subsequent Turkish governments in terms of transforming its
democracy so as to comply with the Copenhagen criteria. This wave of
democratization inevitably has raised questions about the fate of Kemalism, which
has been largely penetrated by these reforms. When these reforms are coupled with
some allegations both from the EU and from within Turkey as being a barrier to
Turkey’s EU membership, it became inevitable to put Kemalism and its fate into
interrogation. This thesis aims to answer the question of how and why prevalent
interpretation of Kemalism is being strained by the EU conditionality that permeates
fundamentals of Kemalism.
Keywords: Kemalism, Turkey and the European Union, the Copenhagen Criteria.
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ÖZET
KEMALİZM KOPENHAG KRİTERLERİYLE BULUŞUYOR:
NEO-KEMALİZMİN DOĞUŞU
Günay, Defne
Yüksek Lisans, Uluslararası İlişkiler Bölümü
Tez Yöneticisi: Yrd. Doç. Dr. Ali Tekin
Eylül 2005
Avrupa Birliği’nin 3 Ekim 2005’te Türkiye’yle müzakerelere başlama
kararı almasıyla bu uzun yolculukta önemli bir dönüm noktasına gelinmiş oldu.
Birlik tarafından 17 Aralık 2004’te alınan bu karar Türk hükümetlerinin Kopenhag
Kriterlerine uyum amacıyla demokratikleşme adına art arda yaptıkları reformların bir
sonucudur. Kuşkusuz bu demokratikleşme dalgası, bu reformlardan büyük ölçüde
etkilenen Kemalizmin geleceği ile ilgili sorular oluşturacaktı. Bu reformların hem
Avrupa Birliği hem Türkiye içinden Kemalizmin Türkiye’nin Avrupa Birliği
Üyeliği’ne engel teşkil ettiğine dair ithamlarla birleşmesiyle; Kemalizmi ve onun
geleceğini incelemek kaçınılmaz hale gelmiştir. Bu tez, Kemalizmin mevcut
yorumunun temel noktalarına temas eden Avrupa Birliği şartlılığı dolayısıyla neden
ve nasıl zorlandığı sorusuna bir cevap aramaktadır.
Anahtar Kelimeler: Kemalizm, Avrupa Birliği- Türkiye ilişkileri, Kopenhag
Kriterleri.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I would like to express my gratitude to my supervisor Asst. Prof. Dr. Ali
Tekin for his valuable contributions and support that kept me going throughout this
study. I am also heavily indebted to Prof. Dr. Yüksel İnan for his instructive
comments, understanding and encouragement that helped me out in hard times. I
would also like to thank Asst. Prof. Dr. Aylin Güney for her valuable suggestions
during my thesis committee.
I would like to express my thanks to my family for always being by my
side. Finally, I am grateful to my friends Pınar Gözen, Tolga Türker and Cem Tuncer
for their patience and encouragement.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT...............................................................................................................iii ÖZET..........................................................................................................................iv ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .......................................................................................v TABLE OF CONTENTS...........................................................................................vi LIST OF TABLES .....................................................................................................vii INTRODUCTION......................................................................................................1 CHAPTER I: EU CONDITIONALITY AND ITS IMPACT ON KEMALISM.......6
1.1 Historical Evolution of Turkey-EU Relations ..................................6 1.2 The EU Challenges Kemalism..........................................................8
CHAPTER II: DEFINING KEMALISM..................................................................15 2.1 Atatürk’s Style of Governance..........................................................15
2.1.1 Atatürk’s Long-Term Targets ..........................................15 2.1.2 Atatürk’s Tactics ..............................................................16
2.1.2.1 Republicanism..........................................17 2.1.2.2 Nationalism ..............................................18 2.1.2.3 Populism...................................................19 2.1.2.4 Etatism .....................................................20 2.1.2.5 Laicism.....................................................21 2.1.2.6 Reformism................................................23
2.1.3 Essence of Kemalism: A Weltanschauung ......................24 CHAPTER III: HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF THE PROBLEMATIC ISSUES ...............................................................29
3.1 Historical Evolution of the Kurdish Question...................................29 3.1.1 Genesis of the Issue..........................................................29 3.1.2 Aftermath of the 1980 Military Coup ..............................38
3.2 The Alevi Question ...........................................................................39 3.2.1 From the War of National Liberation to the 1980 Coup..39 3.2.2 Aftermath of the 1980 Military Coup…………………...43
3.3 Role of the Military in Politics.........................................................45 3.3.1 Stepping into the Political Scene .....................................45 3.3.2 The 1980 Coup.................................................................51
3.4 Limitations on Sovereignty..............................................................54 3.4.1 The Lausanne Peace Treaty .............................................56 3.4.2 Entrance to the League of Nations...................................57 3.4.3 Limitations on Sovereignty due to the Relations with the EU ..................................................... 62
CHAPTER IV: ORTHODOX AND NEO-KEMALIST VIEWS.............................64 4.1 Orthodox Kemalists .........................................................................67 4.2 Neo-Kemalists..................................................................................75
CONCLUSION..........................................................................................................83 BIBLIOGRAPHY......................................................................................................86
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LIST OF TABLES
TABLE 1 Personnel at the Department of Religious Affairs……………………44
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INTRODUCTION
Turkey has its eyes set on the European Union (EU)1 membership since the
conclusion of Ankara Agreement, which is the association agreement signed between
the European Economic Community and Turkey in 1963. Since then Turkey-EU
relations has occupied a privileged position in Turkey’s foreign policy. Despite all
ups and downs in this thorny road, Turkey has always insisted on the EU
membership. Turkey’s long-drawn-out journey came to a turning point after getting 3
October 2005 as a date for the launch of accession talks with the EU. This decision
made by the Union on 17 December 2004 was an upshot of huge steps taken by
subsequent Turkish governments in terms of transforming its democracy so as to
comply with the so-called Copenhagen criteria, which are stability of institutions
guaranteeing democracy, the rule of law, human rights and respect for and protection
of minorities; the existence of a functioning market economy as well as the capacity
to cope with competitive pressure and market forces within the Union; and the ability
to take on the obligations of membership including adherence to the aims of political,
economic and monetary union. Turkish Grand National Assembly amended more
than one-fifth of the articles of the 1982 Constitution since 1999 and passed seven
harmonization packages till now that introduced new provisions in areas like the
legal composition and functioning of the National Security Council (NSC), abolished
the death penalty, improved individual cultural rights, freedom of expression, right to
association and peaceful assembly. 1 I will utilize “the EU” to refer to the entire history of the post-war European integration even though the endeavor had been named as the European Economic Community (EEC) between 1957 and 1992, and the European Community from 1992 onwards.
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This wave of democratization inevitably has raised questions about the fate
of Turkey’s founding ideology that is commonly referred to as Kemalism2, which has
been presumably largely penetrated by these reforms. When these reforms are
coupled with some allegations from the EU as being a barrier to Turkey’s EU
membership with its “fear of the undermining of the integrity of the Turkish state and
an emphasis on the homogeneity of Turkish culture, an important role for the army,
and a very rigid attitude to religion”3, it became inevitable to put Kemalism and its
fate into interrogation.
Although Kemalism was originally designed as a rather flexible outlook,
the process of transforming it into an ideology started after the 1950s. Particularly
the 1980 coup took huge steps in transforming Kemalism into an ideology. The 1982
Constitution frequently made mention of Kemalism as a guiding ideology by taking
its six principles as tantamount to an ideology that is closed to revision. This specific
interpretation of Kemalism (hereafter the orthodox interpretation4) prevailed in the
policies and the practices of the post-1980 governments. However, the EU
conditionality that gained strength after Turkey’s recognition as a candidate country
in the 1999 Helsinki Summit heavily strained this orthodox interpretation by
2 In general terms Kemalism can be defined as Turkey’s founding ideology that is built upon six principles— the so-called six arrows, which are republicanism, nationalism, populism, etatism, secularism, and revolutionism. These principles are usually referred to as the founding or state ideology of Turkey. See Heinz Kramer, A Changing Turkey: The Challenge to Europe and the United States (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2000), 1; Haldun Gülalp, “Turkey Questions of National Identity,” in New Xenophobia in Europe ed. Bernd Baumgartl and Adrian Favell (London: Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1995), 358; Gülistan Gürbey, “The Development of the Kurdish Nationalist Movement in Turkey since the 1980s,” in The Kurdish Nationalist Movement in the 1990s, ed. Robert Olson (Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky, 1996), 10; and İhsan D. Dağı, “Democratic Transition in Turkey, 1980-83: The Impact of European Diplomacy,” in Turkey: Identity, Democracy, Politics, ed. Sylvia Kedourie (London: Frank Cass, 1996), 139. 3 Murat Belge, “Oostlander’s Notorious Turkey Report”, www.turkishpress.com, retrieved on 10 June 2005. 4 Orthodoxy is the opinion which adheres as closely as possible to a given set of beliefs. Roger Scruton, A Dictionary of Political Thought (London: Macmillan, 1996), 397. Built on this definition, orthodox Kemalism refers to the prevalent, Kemalist ‘ideology’ that has largely taken its ideological form after the 1980 military coup. Members of this group regard Kemalism as a dogma and view Turkey’s EU membership prospect through this ideological lense. Their views will be discussed in detail in Chapter IV.
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demanding key policy changes in areas such as the Kurdish question, the Alevi
question, the role of the military. These demands as well as the idea of limiting
national sovereignty and sharing competences with the Union institutions in case of
Turkey’s membership to the Union seriously clashed with the orthodox interpretation
of Kemalism. There emerged the prospect of the EU membership whereas the
orthodox Kemalists have been highly sceptical of relinquishing national sovereignty
in key policy making areas. The EU conditionality pushed Turkey to grant cultural
rights to its Kurdish originated people and to eliminate the double standard in the
treatment of the Alevis and other religious minorities, whereas the orthodox
Kemalists have been in favour of restricting all reflections of Kurdish and Alevi
identity. The EU urged Turkey to ensure civilian control of the military, whereas the
orthodox Kemalists believe that the TAF have to oversee Turkey’s political
development.
This thesis aims to answer the question as to how and why this orthodox
interpretation of Kemalism is being strained by the EU conditionality that permeates
fundamentals of their interpretation of Kemalism. This thesis argues that although
the orthodox Kemalist interpretation did not aim to and could not accommodate itself
with the requirements of the EU membership, a neo-Kemalist group started to
flourish, which could answer the requirements of the EU as well as the changing
juncture by reinterpreting Kemalism and restoring it in its original form that was an
outlook. This group by and large argues that Kemalism cannot be a stagnant ideology
that is not open to change, since its author was a pragmatist and rational leader. With
regard to the Kurdish and the Alevi question, they have a more liberal position and
they argue that pragmatism of Atatürk can be used for legitimizing greater freedom
to use Kurdish. They also regard the compulsory religious courses as a threat to
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laicism and this way they share the EU’s concerns regarding this issue. Members of
the neo-Kemalist group commonly reject the dominance of the military in Turkish
politics and hold that the Turkish society has matured over time. With regard to the
final problematic issue, the issue of sharing sovereignty with the EU institutions,
they point that Ataturk himself had accepted limitations on Turkey’s sovereignty for
the sake of the country’s welfare and peace, and that this reasoning of Atatürk should
be followed today.
Exploring the fundamentals of the orthodox interpretation of Kemalism
necessitates a historical approach since it evolved in the course of time. After
presenting in Chapter I an overview of how EU conditionality has been penetrating
into the orthodox interpretation of Kemalism especially after the 1999 Helsinki
Summit that elevated Turkey’s status to candidacy, the next chapter gives an account
of Atatürk’s long-term goals and tactics that are embedded in the ‘six arrows’. This
chapter aims to reveal Atatürk’s basic philosophy concerning the ‘six arrows’. After
revealing the ideals and the principles that Atatürk prioritized, in Chapter III, the
historical evolution of the problematic aspects of the EU conditionality, namely the
Kurdish question, the Alevi question, and the role of the military in Turkish politics
are analyzed. These issues are analyzed in two frameworks of time- the early years of
the Republic and aftermath of the 1980 military coup- for the purposes of this thesis
since these two distinctive periods are indicative of Kemalism and the orthodox
version of Kemalism, respectively. This analysis is made in this manner so as to
reveal the rupture from Atatürk’s ideals and practices after the 1980 military coup
d’etat in those issues. Chapter III also includes another problematic area, the
limitations on sovereignty, which is also analyzed in a historical perspective.
Although a significant rupture with the 1980 military coup from previous practices
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cannot be observed in this particular issue, another major characteristic that the
orthodox Kemalists have in common is their negative position regarding the EU
membership and limitations on sovereignty. Thus this issue is also handled in a way
that reveals the practices before emergence of the prospect of the EU membership.
Building upon this historical analysis, Chapter IV explains the views of the
orthodox and neo-Kemalists over these problematic issues. In this chapter, it is
argued that the prospect of the EU membership was intensified after the Helsinki
decision to recognize Turkey as a candidate country, and this motive led to a stiff
wave of reform packages. Thus, a strong pressure for a revision of the orthodox
interpretation of Kemalism emerged. I present divergent views of orthodox and neo-
Kemalists in order to show how this neo-Kemalist group accommodates itself to the
EU conditionality and to the prospect of the EU membership, as well as how the
orthodox Kemalists remain incompatible with the idea of the EU membership.
Finally I conclude that the emergence or a strengthening of a vocal neo-
Kemalist group is on its way that synthesizes the progressive essence of Kemalism
and the democratic spirit of the Copenhagen political criteria so as to answer the EU
conditionality.
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CHAPTER I
EU CONDITIONALITY AND ITS IMPACT ON KEMALISM
1.1 Historical Evolution of Turkey-EU Relations
Turkey’s first relations with the EU started by the Menderes government’s
application to be an associate member of the EEC in 1959, right after the Greek
application in the same year. The association agreement (Ankara Agreement) was
signed on 12 September 1963. The agreement envisaged completion of a customs
union between Turkey and the EU within three stages and Article 28 clearly stated
that full membership could be negotiated after Turkey fulfills all of its contractual
commitments. Technical details of the customs union were decided in an Additional
Protocol that was signed on 23 November 1970.5
Turkey’s application for full membership came in 1987 while Turkey was
pursuing a more liberal, outward oriented economic policy and Turkish industry was
developing rapidly with the potential of competition with European industries. But
the Commission’s response at that time was negative. The Commission concluded
that “it would not be useful to open accession negotiations with Turkey straight
away" and drew attention to the dispute between Greece and Turkey and "the
5 The Additional Protocol came into force on 1 January 1973. the three stages that were envisaged by the Additional Protocol were the preparatory, transitional and the final stage. The Additional Protocol finalized the first stage and regulated the passage to the transitional stage. In 1 January 1996 the final stage came into force and the Customs Union between the EC and Turkey was concluded.
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situation in Cyprus."6 The Commission also pointed that the Community could not
admit new members before completing its single market, and also that Turkey
needed to improve itself economically, socially and politically before its accession to
the EU. Although the response of the Commission was negative; this application for
full membership revived Turkey-EC relations after a period of cool down and
suspension due to the 1980 military coup in Turkey and EC’s blocking of the 4th
Financial Protocol. The Customs union agreement came about after this revival in
relations.
On 31 December 1995 Turkey became the only state to complete customs
union with the EU, without being a full member. Following the Kardak crisis of
January 1996, relations between Turkey and Greece, and inevitably with the
European Union were strained. Tense relations were reflected in the Agenda 2000,
adopted on 15 July 1997, which urges Turkey to “give a firm commitment to resolve
a number of problems in the region and contribute actively to a just and lasting
settlement of the Cypriot question”.7
1997 Luxembourg European Council displayed very well this tension and
the EU’s overall reluctance towards Turkey’s membership. EU members convened
in Luxembourg summit to discuss the enlargement issue as the main item. This
summit was important for Turkey because the Turkish government was waiting for a
positive response to its candidacy question. However, the summit was a great
disappointment for Turkey since the EU did not include Turkey in the accession
strategy, while setting a timetable for other applicant countries.8 The Council
6 Commission Opinion on Turkey’s Request for Accession to the Community, Part II. Par.9 and Part III. Par.10. 7 1998 Regular Report, part b, Relations between the European Union and Turkey, par.14. 8 The applicant countries that were given a timetable were Cyprus, Hungary, Poland, Estonia, the Czech Republic and Slovenia. It was also stated in the Luxembourg Presidency Conclusions, par. 28
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concluded that Turkey was eligible for membership but prior to its accession to the
Union it had to realize “pursuit of the political and economic reforms on which it has
embarked, including the alignment of human rights standards and practices on those
in force in the European Union; respect for and protection of minorities.”9After this
disappointment caused by the Luxembourg, Turkish Prime Minister Mesut Yılmaz
declared that Turkey would not have political dialogue with the EU anymore.
Official declaration also proposed the continuation of relations on the basis of
existing agreements, namely the Association Agreement and the Customs Union
Agreement. After this stake, the revolutionary step in Turkey-EU relations came with
the 1999 Helsinki Summit, which granted Turkey the candidacy status.
1.2 The EU Challenges Kemalism
Since the Cardiff summit in June 1998, the Union has been preparing yearly
Progress Reports10 and Accession Partnership documents11 since the Helsinki
Summit in December 1999. These documents are prepared in line with the
Copenhagen criteria that constitute the basis of accession criteria. Copenhagen
criteria impose on candidate countries the stability of institutions guaranteeing
that the preparation of negotiations with Romania, Slovakia, Latvia, Lithuania and Bulgaria would be speeded up. 9 Luxembourg Presidency Conclusions, 13 December 1997, part d. Review Procedure, par. 35. 10 The Regular progress reports contain a detailed analysis of the progress made by the candidate countries. The progress reports are prepared every year by the European Commission for each candidate country. The purpose is to identify issues, which will be discussed in detail in the negotiations. The European Parliament gives its view on the progress reports, and they are also adopted by the European Council. 11 The Accession Partnership documents concluded by the Council with the applicant countries are prepared to assist the candidate country government in its efforts to comply with the Copenhagen criteria and they outline the priorities for implementing the Community acquis. The accession partnerships are adjusted over time by the Commission. In response to the Accession Partnership documents, candidate countries prepare their own National Program for the Adoption of the Acquis (NPAA), which contains the plans of that country with regards to its integration to the EU. It explains in a timetable, how it plans to transpose the conditions outlined in the Accession Partnership documents and gives a rough evaluation of its financial and human resources that it needs for realizing those conditions. NPAAs can be revised in time like the Accession Partnerships.
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democracy, the rule of law, human rights and respect for and protection of
minorities; the existence of a functioning market economy as well as the capacity to
cope with competitive pressure and market forces within the Union; the ability to
take on the obligations of membership including adherence to the aims of political,
economic and monetary union. Since the recognition of its candidacy, Turkey has
been striving to comply with the Copenhagen criteria that were set by the EU. Some
elements of Accession Partnership documents and Progress Reports clash with the
orthodox interpretation of Kemalism that has been prevailing since the 1980s,
especially on the Kurdish question, the Alevi question, the role of the military in
Turkish politics and accepting limitations on national sovereignty particularly in
terms of policy making.
Since the 1998 Regular Report by the Commission on Turkey, the EU has
been demanding from Turkey full respect to grant cultural rights to Turkish citizens
of Kurdish origin, recognize the existence of an Alevi identity, downgrading the role
of the military in Turkish politics so as to align it with the EU practices. The
Commission repeatedly calls Turkey to find a solution that would include
“recognition of certain forms of Kurdish cultural identity and greater tolerance of the
ways of expressing that identity, provided it does not advocate separatism or
terrorism.”12 With regard to the Alevi problem, the Commission reiterates that there
exists a double standard in treatment between those religious minorities recognized
by the Lausanne Treaty and other religious minorities, including the Alevi
community in Turkey concerning the compulsory religious instruction in schools,
which does not recognize the Alevi identity, as well as the availability of financial
12 1999 Regular Report by the Commission on Turkey’s Progress Towards Accession, 1.2. Human Rights and the Protection of Minorities, Minority Rights and Protection of Minorities, par.1
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support only for the building of Sunni mosques and religious foundations.13 The
Commission reiterates that “the lack of civilian control of the army gives cause for
concern that is reflected by the major role played by the army in political life through
the National Security Council”14 in almost every Progress Report since 1998, as well
as the Accession Partnership documents of 2000 and 2003.
Although Accession Partnership documents and Progress Reports constitute
the official conditions and demands of the Union, there exist further documents or
decisions of other EU institutions, which seriously reveal the clash between EU
membership and prevalent interpretation of Kemalism, in other words, orthodox
Kemalism. The most famous one is a report prepared by a European parliamentarian,
Arie Oostlander. Oostlander report regards “underlying philosophy of the Turkish
state”15 as follows:
The underlying philosophy of the Turkish state comprises elements such as nationalism, an important role for the army, and a rigid attitude to religion, which are hard to reconcile with the founding values of the European Union, and has to be adapted in order to enable a less rigid and more open-minded cultural and regional diversity as well as a modern and tolerant concept of the nation State.16
Other than the Oostlander report there exist many other resolutions adopted
by the European Parliament in similar fields such as the Economic and Social
Committee’s report, which suggests that the unity of the Turkish state should be
compatible with the rights of the Kurds to use and teach their language17 and the
European Parliament resolution that calls PKK and Turkish government “to find a
13 2000 Regular Report by the Commission on Turkey’s Progress towards Accession, 1.2. Human Rights and the Protection of Minorities, Civil and Political Rights,par.15. 14 1998 Regular Report, 1.4. General Evaluation, par.1. 15 It should be noted that in previous drafts of the Oostlander report, the word “Kemalism” was explicitly used instead of the term “underlying philosophy of the Turkish state.” Turkish Daily News, 14 May 2003. 16 Arie Oostlander, Report on Turkey’s Application for Membership of the European Union (COM(2002) 700-C5-0104/2003-2000/2014(COS)). 17 Economic and Social Committee of the European Communities, Opinion, Relations Between the European Union and Turkey, CES 1314/93, Brussels, 22 December 1993.
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non-violent and political solution to the Kurdish issue respecting territorial integrity
and unity of Turkey, while acknowledging the right of Turkish citizens to strive for a
form of cultural autonomy within Turkey by peaceful means”18 are two of such
reports and resolutions that are directly linked to the Kemalist principles.
In response to the Accession Partnership document the Turkish government
prepared its NPAA in 2000 and revised it in 2003. Accession Partnership document
of 2000 assured that all obstacles on broadcasting in languages other than Turkish
will be removed and civilian rule over the judiciary- including the State Security
Courts will be ensured in the short term; and guaranteed to align the NSC with
European standards and consolidate every individual’s cultural rights regardless of
ethnic origin in the mid-term. Its revised version by and large reiterates the mid-term
guarantees as its short-term priorities. However the outstanding step taken by
Turkish authorities was to adopt subsequent reform packages that introduced changes
in almost every area of Turkish politics. The Turkish governments started designing
and adopting reform packages to comply with the demands of the Union. In October
2001, a constitutional reform was introduced that strengthened the guarantees in the
field of fundamental freedoms and restricting the grounds for death penalty.
Constitutional amendments of October 2001 also made some changes in the legal
framework of the NSC, by increasing the number of civilians in the NSC, removing
the representative of the NSC in the Supervision Board of Cinema, Video and Music
[Kültür Bakanlığı Sinema, Video ve Müzik Eserleri Denetleme Kurulu], and by
abolishing the extended executive and supervisory powers, such as the Secretary
General’s following-up the implementation of any recommendation made by the
NSC. Another amendment provides that the post of Secretary General will no longer
18 European Parliament, Resolution on the Situation in Turkey and the offer of a ceasefire made by the PKK (B4-0060, 0076, 0086 and 0089/96), 18 January 1996.
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be reserved exclusively for a military person. Among seven harmonization packages
that were adopted between February 2002 and August 2003, the reform package of
August 2002 was a landmark event. This reform package abolished the death
penalty, lifted legal restrictions on individual cultural rights, made retrial possible in
the light of the decisions of the European Court of Human Rights, reinforced legal
guarantees on freedoms of expression and press, eased restrictions on the right to
association and peaceful assembly, ensured the right to property of community
foundations belonging to the minorities in Turkey.
It is important to note that the pace of reforms dramatically increased after
1999 Helsinki decision to grant Turkey candidacy status. This is due to the fact that
recognition as a candidate country increased the prospect of full membership in the
eyes of Turkish people and politicians. As Öniş puts,
Following the Helsinki decision, the incentives to undertake reform have increased considerably. The pressures to conform to EU norms, as well as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), have created major avenues for change in the recent Turkish context in both the economic and the political realms.19
This “appropriate mix of incentives” in Öniş’s words led Turkey into a
democratization drive and at the same time into an atmosphere of debate, especially
concerning the essence of Kemalism and its future. These debates were reflected in
official documents as well. A report prepared by the Prime Ministry High Council
for the Coordination of Human Rights Issues [Başbakanlık İnsan Hakları
Koordinatör Üst Kurulu] in 2000, which included ground breaking proposals such as
abolishing the ban on use of languages other than Turkish in expression of thoughts
19 Ziya Öniş, “Domestic Politics, International Norms and Challenges to the State: Turkey-EU Relations in the Post-Helsinki Era,” in Turkey and the European Union, ed. Ali Çarkoğlu and Barry Rubin (London: Frank Cass, 2003), 9.
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led to the dismissal of its architect Gürsel Demirok.20 Another report prepared by the
Prime Ministry Human Rights Advisory Board [Başbakanlık İnsan Hakları Danışma
Kurulu] in 18 October 2004 was fiercely debated and highly criticized. The report
suggested updating the minority interpretations based on Lausanne Treaty,
overcoming the ‘Sevres syndrome’ that turned out to be sort of a paranoia, viewing
EU membership as continuation of Kemalist ideal of civilizationism, and argued that
even the most innocent identity claims had been perceived as attempts to divide
Turkey.21 This report was so provocative that two non-governmental organizations,
the Rule of Law Association [Hukukun Egemenliği Derneği] and the Societal
Thought Association [Toplumsal Düşünce Derneği], brought the authors of the report
before the court. One report caused its author’s dismissal, and the other ended up
with a law suit. These events are illustrative to show how EU candidacy led to an
increase in the pace of reforms, and aggravated the debates on Kemalism and its
essentials.
Aside of the explicit demands and conditions voiced by the EU, there is
also another aspect of the EU conditionality that raises questions within some circles
in Turkey: the issue of sovereignty limitation that is embedded in the philosophy of
the EU integration.
The EU, as a “post-modern polity”22 seriously challenges the classical
conception of sovereign state in which the governments has an absolute right to
control their own territory and independence of all other states in the international
arena. Its multi-level governance assigns certain tasks to the supranational and sub
national levels, as well as to the nation states. This extension of sovereign rights both
20 “MGK’nın dediği oldu,” Radikal (Turkish Daily), 23 June 2000. 21 “Devlete ‘Azınlığa Direnme’ Raporu,” Sabah (Turkish Daily), 18 October 2004. 22 James Caporaso, “The European Union and forms of state: Westphalian, regulatory or post-modern?” Journal of Common Market Studies 34 (1996), 30.
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to the supranational institutions and sub national institutions puts limitations on the
nation state’s sovereignty in policy-making. 70 percent of public works spending in
Europe is decided by the local governments, whereas the single market is managed
by the Commission that is a supranational institution. The European Central Bank
governs the monetary policies, whereas after every deepening step the scope of the
qualified majority voting23 in decision making is increased. This sort of a limitation
of sovereignty also strains Turkey since it has a deep rooted sovereign state tradition.
It is obvious that the norms common to the EU members, as well as the
EU’s demands from Turkey touches upon some basic principles of Kemalism and
cause severe debates throughout the academia, politics and the society as a whole.
Before discussing the different interpretations of Kemalism, it is necessary to
identify what Kemalism really means. Without understanding Atatürk’s heritage, it is
impossible to assess the validity of its interpretations. The next chapter aims at
answering questions of whether Kemalism is a closed ideology that sets its eye to
imprison its adherents, or it is a flexible outlook that was frozen in the course of
time.
23 A qualified majority is the number of votes required in the Council for a decision to be adopted when certain issues are debated. After 1 November 2004, following enlargement of the Union, the QM went up to 232 votes out of a total of 321, representing a majority of the Member States. The European Constitution currently being ratified provides for 45 new QMV situations.
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CHAPTER II
DEFINING KEMALISM
2.1 Atatürk’s Style of Governance
Atatürk’s governance during the years of national liberation and in the early
years of the Republic can be categorized into two: his long-term goals and the tactics
he utilized to achieve those long-term goals. These two categories need to be
distinguished and further elaborated.
2.1.1 Atatürk’s long-term targets
A common fallacy among Turkish politicians and students of Turkish
politics is to overemphasize the means Atatürk had utilized to achieve his goals,
instead of his aims. As Heper puts, Atatürkist state “is not the state that existed
during Atatürk’s life time, but the state as it was espoused by him”24. Thus, Atatürk’s
political thoughts and his expressed goals need further elaboration for the purposes
of this thesis.
Atatürk and his associates tried to build a secular republic out of the ashes
of a theocratic monarchy that had left behind an uneducated ummah, while fighting a
war of national liberation at the same time. During this struggle Atatürk had the
chance to analyze the reasons behind the demise of the Ottoman Empire and he
24 Metin Heper, The State Tradition in Turkey (Walkington: The Eothen Press, 1985), 48.
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started to formulate his own system of political thought. He saw the source of decline
as personal rule of Sultans, and peoples’ alienation from discussing the fate of their
country due to long years of Sultanate. In the light of these observations he
concluded that the people should be awakened from above. Turkish society had its
own “genuine feelings and desires”, and these feelings and aspirations existed
regardless of whether or not the people identified them.25 Thus, the Turkish
reformers namely the Kemalist cadres were responsible from identifying these
“genuine or real feelings” of the people and directing the people in accordance with
these orientations since Turkish peoples’ collective conscience had not reached a
certain level. This outlook towards politics is an upshot of Atatürk’s positivist
orientation. “Positivists are committed to the belief that there is a knowable world
‘out there’ that has a structure and form that can be grasped by the competent
investigator who is value-neutral and committed to nothing but the search for
truth.”26 In Turkish case this view found its reflection in modernization led by state
elites from above, through different reforms that were believed to guide people to the
level of contemporary civilization.
2.1.2 Atatürk’s Tactics
Kemalist principles, namely the “Six Arrows” constitute the means believed
to lead people to the level of contemporary civilizations, which is the genuine feeling
of the people. Four of the Six Arrows-- republicanism, laicism, nationalism,
25 Heper, The State, 50. 26 David Ashley and David Michael Orenstein, Sociological Theory: Classical Statements (Boston : Allyn and Bacon, 1990), 55.
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populism-- were embraced as the Republican People’s Party’s (RPP)27 basic
principles in 1927 and other two principles-- etatism and reformism-- were adopted
by the RPP in the third congress of the Party in 1931, and were incorporated into the
Constitution in 1937. A brief overview of these Six Arrows will be illuminating at
this point.
2.1.2.1 Republicanism
Atatürk had already announced his plan to establish a republic in a speech
he gave on 13 August 1923. He said “The new Turkish state is a people’s state; it is
the state of the people.”28 This objective was realized by abolishing the Sultanate on
1 November 1922; and the Turkish Republic was proclaimed on 29 October 1923.
Republicanism basically means rendering sovereign the national will,
instead of personal will as it was in the Ottoman Empire. The new state designed its
policies in line with the genuine feelings of people, while ensuring popular
participation in the governance.
Republicanism came about as a reaction to the theocratic monarchy rule in
the Ottoman Empire. The principle that “sovereignty belongs to the people without
qualifications and conditions” was a principle set to delineate “not to whom
sovereignty belonged, but, rather, to whom it did not belong” and Sultan surely did
not have any share in sovereignty.29 The Sultan derived his legitimacy from God and
he was the sole authority in government. This regime was attempted to be challenged
27 RPP was founded by Atatürk on 9 September 1923. It is the successor of the Anatolia and Rumeli Defense of Rights Organization that led the War of National Liberation against the allied powers. After establishing the Republic, Atatürk became the head of the RPP until his death in 1938. The six arrows in the party emblem represents these six principles, also known as the Six Arrows of Kemalism. 28 Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Atatürk’ün Söylev ve Demeçleri I (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 1961), 320. 29 Heper, The State, 51.
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by a Constitutional Monarchy that was set up in 1876. However, this was an
unsuccessful attempt since the Sultan remained as the sole authority in practice. The
constitution granted the Sultan the right to disband the Parliament and representatives
of the people were not influential enough to challenge the powers of the Sultan.30
Had been aware of the deficiencies of this regime, Atatürk founded the secular
Turkish Republic, when there were only three other established secular republics in
the advanced world: USA, France and Switzerland.
2.1.2.2 Nationalism
Nationalism was a crucial component of development, for Atatürk. He said
in his famous speech on 20 March 1923 that “Let us be aware that a nation which has
not found her national identity is prey to other nations.”31
Turkish nationalism was championed by the Union and Progress Party early
in the 20th century. Ziya Gökalp was one of the proponents of nationalism throughout
the period. Ziya Gökalp argues that nationalism arose in the second half of the 19th
century, among Ottoman intellectuals due to the political and cultural decline of the
Muslim countries and the empire itself in contrast to the development in the West;
and the dominant ideology, nationalism, showed them the way towards
development.32 Thus, some of the Turkish intellectuals followed the dominant
ideology of the West, and embraced nationalism. Though these ideological
commitments during the second half of 19th century constituted a major source of
Mustafa Kemal’s nationalism, two sets of ideas bear important differences. Atatürk’s
nationalism was not expansionist whereas Ziya Gökalp and Unionists had a rather
30 Suna Kili, The Atatürk Revolution (İstanbul: Türkiye İş Bankası Kültür Yayınları, 2003), 98. 31 Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Atatürk’ün Söylev ve Demeçleri II (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 1961), 142-3. 32 Uriel Heyd, Türk Ulusçuluğu’nun Temelleri (Ankara: Kültür Bakanlığı Yayınları, 2002),103.
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expansionist view, in which they had the goal of unifying all the Turks in Anatolia
and Central Asia under Pan-Turanist ideology.33 On the other hand, Kemalist elite of
the new Turkish Republic adopted nationalism as a means of ensuring development
and overcoming the inferiority complex that emerged after the decline of the
Ottoman Empire and the wars that it lost.34 The principal goal was to impose a self-
consciousness through an identity based on citizenship rather than religion and to let
the nation determine its own goals and aspirations.35
A republican regime needs a nation to rely upon and Atatürk created a
nation out of former subjects of the Ottoman Empire.
2.1.2.3 Populism
Atatürk’s conception of populism can best be inferred from his speech to
the Grand National Assembly on 1 November 1937: “The essence of the program in
our hands prevents us from being interested only in certain sections of the citizen
body. We are servants of all…We do not recognize differences between classes…”36
It can be argued that Atatürk implied by populism a society without class distinctions
among its people and equal participation of every individual to the governance. As
Kili puts rightly, the Liberation War was won by cooperation between different
classes of the society37, such as the military and civil bureaucracy, local notables and
landlords, peasants, even some members of the palace. Thus, Atatürk aimed to keep
this cooperation and unity intact through his idea of populism. As Webster points
out, “Kemalist policy was/is to make [vertical social mobility] completely
33 Kili, The Atatürk, 314. 34 Kili, The Atatürk, 308. 35 Heper, The State, 64. 36 Atatürk’ün Söylev ve Demeçleri, II, 180. 37 Kili, The Atatürk, 324.
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unhindered, whatever the impediments thereto from abuses of free enterprise.”38
Kemalist idea of populism has an egalitarian connotation that envisages popular
participation in governance. Granting women the right to vote and run in municipal
elections in 1930 and in general elections in 1934, can be seen as an instrument of
substantiating populist view.
2.1.2.4 Etatism
Victors of the national liberation war were aware that independence could
only be ensured by economic development. In the Turkish Economic Meeting held in
İzmir on 17 February 1923, Mustafa Kemal emphasized Ottoman Empire’s closing
its eyes to economic affairs as a major reason of its decline.39 In the first years of the
Republic, economic development was hoped to be achieved by adopting liberal
policies, private sector was encouraged and banks were established to provide them
with the necessary loans. However, this liberal policy failed due to the economic
depression of 1929 and the insufficiency of the Turkish private sector. As Cooper
suggests, Turkish private sector could not accumulate enough capital to establish
businesses.40 Apart from this, during the Ottoman period, Turks were excluded from
commerce. Trade was conducted mostly by minority groups, and this caused the lack
of know-how and technical knowledge among the people of the newly-founded
Republic. When these problems were coupled with the Great Depression of 1929,
policy-makers began to seek for alternative economic policies. The closest example
of a successful economy was standing aside them-- the Soviet Union-- and they were
influenced by its state-led economy and getting influenced by this model, Turkey
38 Donald E. Webster, Kemalism: A Civil Religion? (n.d., 1979), 48. 39 Kili, The Atatürk, 340. 40 Malcolm Cooper, “The Legacy of Atatürk” International Affairs 78, No.1 (2000), 117.
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adopted etatism in 1931. Turkish policy-makers developed their five-year plan in
1933 for industrial development on the basis of the recommendations of a Soviet
delegation.41
Atatürk’s etatism envisages an interventionist state, which is active in areas
of public interest and in areas where private sector is incapable to enter. Lewis posits
that Kemalist elite never had the intention to collectivize the economy, or
discouraging the private sector.42 Their primary goal was once again immediate
development.
2.1.2.5 Laicism
1935 program of RPP illustrates the Party`s and Kemalist elite’s view of
secularism:
As the conception of religion is a matter of conscience, the Party considers it to be one of the chief factors of the success of our nation in contemporary progress, to separate ideas of religion from politics, and from the affairs of the world and of the State.43
A modernization program had to be espoused by secularism, since Kemalist
elite was taking over the sovereignty from religion and giving it to the people.
Therefore, secularism was a fundamental principle of Kemalism.
Kemalism was attempting at reforming the attitudes of a society, which had
defined itself in terms of its emotional attachment to Islam.44 Laicism was an
indispensable principle for realising a radical rupture from the ancien regime. To
attain this goal, the new Republic envisaged an interventionist state that tries to
41 Cooper, “The Legacy,” 117. 42 Bernard Lewis, The Emergence of Modern Turkey (London: Oxford University Press, 1968), 286. 43 Lewis, The Emergence, 47. 44 Ümit Cizre Sakallıoğlu, “Islam-State Interaction in Turkey”, International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 28 (1996), 235.
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detach religion from the social life, as well as from the state affairs. Kemalist laicism
is significantly different from the Anglo-Saxon interpretation of secularism in which
the state is neutral in religious affairs. However, Kemalist laicism envisages a state
that is active in separating religion from the social life.45
Atatürk had suffered from the association of religion and governance
throughout the liberation war. Entente powers forced the Caliph to get a fatwa issued
by the Sheikh-ul-Islam, in order to gather support from the people in their fight
against Mustafa Kemal and his supporters.46 In the light of these bitter memories,
Atatürk adopted secularism, while placing it at the center of his reform movements.
Ziya Gökalp had been one of the first advocates of secularism before
Mustafa Kemal. However he used the term la-dini (non-religious) in order to avoid
using the French word laicism. According to Lewis, usage of this term resulted in a
confusion between laicism and irreligion, which led to paramount opposition from
the Muslim clergy.47 However, Kemalist laicism neither meant state’s complete
neutrality in religious affairs, nor liquidation of religion. Atatürk himself was raised
by a religious mother and he did not have any inclination towards atheism.48 He had
two different conceptions of Islam, one of them was the more complicated, artificial
and full of superstitions; and the one that does not oppose consciousness or preclude
progress.49 He believed that the first version, which was also dominant in the
Ottoman Empire should be suppressed and the other one should be promoted.
45 Kili, The Atatürk, 353. 46 Yılmaz Çetiner, Son Padişah Vahdettin (İstanbul : Milliyet, 1993) 253. 47 Lewis, The Emergence, 403. 48 Vamık Volkan, The Immortal Ataturk : A Psychobiography (Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1984), 28. 49 Cizre, “Islam-State Interaction,” 236.
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2.1.2.6 Reformism
Principle of reformism was initially instituted to ensure the development and
modernization of the new state. Reformism guarantees the movement of the state
towards modernization, it renders Kemalism open to change and innovation, when
necessary.50
Mustafa Kemal learnt from the Ottoman case that a state is bound to decline
if it does not catch up with innovations. With this reasoning he pursued many
reforms in order to modernize the new Turkish Republic. Thus it can be confidently
argued that reformism constitutes the most important instrument of Kemalism, which
targets modernization. As Kili contends, “It is not just to ensure modernization that
the society, political system and political culture have to be receptive and committed
to change but also to sustain the continuity of the modern existence.”51 Reformism
aims to protect Kemalism from dogmatism and render it resilient in changing
political circumstances. Dogmatism was seen as an obstacle for modernization,
which is the ultimate goal that was aimed to realize through Kemalist principles.
Reformism prevents the stagnation and decline of the system by keeping it open to
changes.
As Selek points out, reformism has been misinterpreted as it aims to protect
the existing system by revolting, when necessary.52 However, in its essence
reformism means to set new goals according to changing conditions and utilizing
new means to achieve these goals.
50 Kili, The Atatürk, 366. 51 Kili, The Atatürk, 366. 52 Sabahattin Selek, Anadolu İhtilali (İstanbul: Cem, 1973), 741.
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2.1.3 Essence of Kemalism: A Weltanschauung
“I do not want doctrines. They would hinder our progress.”53
I am leaving behind no cliché as a legacy. My legacy is science and rationalism. Times are changing rapidly. Claiming that one could establish rules which could never be subject to change in such a world would be tantamount to denying development of science and mind.54
These words clearly display Atatürk’s intention of leaving behind a flexible
outlook instead of a dogmatic ideology. What lies behind the formulation of six
arrows is a reaction against the ancien regime, and the urge to wipe off the hold of
religion over the society and the state affairs, and what constitutes the core of those
principles is pragmatism, and scientific thinking. But post-Atatürk Turkish politics
has evolved in the opposite direction, by getting more stagnant and more dogmatic
everyday. At this point a plausible question arises in minds as to how Atatürk’s
pragmatic and flexible outlook was transformed into a rigid ideology. Murat Belge
maintains that Atatürk merely pointed at some goals to be achieved rather than
establishing an ideology since he always prioritized change and renovation.
However, Belge argues that, Kemalism was transformed into a rigid ideology on
purpose after its author’s death. In Belge’s words,
today Kemalism, of which the primary goal is Westernization, is being used by anti-Western circles as an ideological tool. Likewise, Kemalism, which is based on directing the people to continuous change, has turned into the most conservative ideology that exists in Turkey.55
This transformation is ably explained by Metin Heper. Heper argues that
Kemalism was not designed as an ideology, as in Shilsian conceptualization. Edward
53 Sami Selçuk, Longing for Democracy (Ankara: Yeni Türkiye publications, 2000), 11. 54 Selçuk, Longing, 11. 55 Murat Belge, “Kemalist İdeolojinin Özellikleri,” Radikal, 7 October 2003.
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Shils demarcates an ideology from an outlook by defining ideology as having an
authoritative and binding formulation that is integrated around some surpassing
principles and aims to address each and every question.56 Custodians of an ideology
claim to be speaking on behalf of a higher entity that is treated as sacrosanct. On the
other hand, an outlook lacks authoritative and explicit promulgation, and it consists
of different views, each of them emphasizes a certain aspect of that outlook they
belong to but accepts the general premise of that outlook. Besides outlooks are less
demanding to its adherents, they do not require full compliance with themselves.
Building upon the Shilsian conception of ideology, Metin Heper classifies
Kemalism as a “Weltanschauung” rather than an ideology. He argues that “it did not
for the long run intend to clamp upon society a closed system of thought…and
longed for a dynamic rather than static consensus.”57 Despite the “-ism” attached to
his name, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk had never been an ideologue. He fervently
refrained from dogmatizing his views that had been incorporated in the party
program of RPP, in 1931. He adopted reformism that sustained the dynamism of the
movement, and he responded to the question why RPP had no ideology by saying
that if they had one, it would have frozen them. These examples clearly reveal that
Atatürk never had the intention of establishing an ideology. What he originally
brought about was an outlook that had the premise of modernization through
scientific thinking. However, things have changed after Atatürk’s death, Kemalism
was gradually transformed into an ideology, and the most drastic ideologization
came alongside the 1980 military coup.
56 Edward Shils, “The Concept and Function of Ideology”, International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, Vol. 7 and 8 (New York: The Macmillan Company&The Free Press, 1972), 66 as quoted in Heper, “A Weltanschauung-turned Partial Ideology and Normative Ethics: ‘Atatürkism’ in Turkey,” Orient 25, no.1 (March 1984), 85, note 16. 57 Heper, “A Weltanschauung,” 88.
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As Heper observes rightly, 1961 Constitution did not make direct reference to
Kemalism as an ideology; on the other hand 1982 Constitution frequently made
mention of Kemalism as a guiding ideology. Article 2 states that the Republic of
Turkey will be “loyal to the nationalism of Atatürk”58 and the Preamble reads as
follows:
No idea or opinion contrary to…the Turkish historical and spiritual values, nationalism, the principles and reforms and modernization concepts as set forth by Atatürk shall be supported.59
One might presume that such a direct reference to “Turkish historical and
moral values” would connote to a rupture from Kemalist thought that is based on
positivism, but it is not true. The National Security Council of 1980 coup merged
Kemalism to a system of thought known as ‘Turkish-Islamic Synthesis’ so as to cope
with political polarization, which established different camps centered around
different ideologies.
Unlike the previous military interventions, the 1980 coup had its own
ideology that was to be inculcated to the society so as to restore the order in society.
This ideology is known as the “Turkish-Islamic Synthesis”, which was originally
formulated by a club of intellectuals, which was named ‘The Intellectuals’ Hearth’ in
the late 1960s.60 Opinions and adherents of this club have a great deal of importance,
because many policies of post-1980 governments were rooted in the Hearth’s
opinions, and many members of the club had been appointed as high-ranking
bureaucrats after the 1980 coup.
58 1982 Constitution of the Republic of Turkey, part 1, Article 2. 59 1982 Constitution of the Republic of Turkey, Preamble. The phrase “no idea or opinion” was changed as “no activity” by an amendment done on 3 October 2001. 60 Binnaz Toprak, “Religion as State Ideology in a Secular Setting: The Turkish-Islamic Synthesis,” in Aspects of Religion in Secular Turkey , ed. Malcolm Wagstaff (Durham: University of Durham Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, 1990), 10.
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Members of the club believed that the history of the Turks had to be rewritten
with special emphasis on pre-Islamic Turkish culture and its combination with Islam.
They contend that pre-Islamic Turkish culture gave Turks certain values such as the
fear of God, patriotism, love of the family, obedience and respect for customs; and
they suggest that divergence from this culture for the sake of imitation of the West
caused corruption and disorder in the society.61 They regard Western style of
education as primary source of disorder, and they suggest placing emphasis on
Turkish and Islamic values in education and bolstering national art and music. They
regard placing emphasis on the Turkish-Islamic synthesis through means of mass
media, education and state planning as a cement that would reunite Turkish people.
Consequently this synthesis was injected into Kemalism, which was previously a
flexible outlook based on science and technology, and transformed it into a hard
ideology that had a prescription for all kinds of problems in political and social life.
In Toprak’s words,
Both the legislation and the political discourse of the post-1980 period have revolved around the key concepts of national unity, ideological uniformity, social peace and political stability. These aims were to be achieved by a general process of depoliticization, coupled with a concerted effort to socialize the new generations within the framework of the ideals set forth in the Turkish-Islamic synthesis. 62
A set of practices followed adoption of this formula: the Ministry of
Education sent to schools a declaration stated that the Darwinian theory was based on
scientific deception, the teaching of logic and philosophy in high schools was made
optional whereas Article 24 of the 1982 Constitution made religious culture and
moral education compulsory in primary and secondary schools, the canteens of
61 Toprak, “Religion as State Ideology,” 11. 62 Toprak, “Religion as State,” 13.
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several ministries were closed during Ramazan,63 Article 26 of the Constitution
prohibited use of some languages including Kurdish in the expression and
dissemination of thought and strained any kinds of reflections of ethnic and sectarian
differences, and the Higher Education Council was instrumental in carving the
educational system in line with this new philosophy.
63 Andrew Mango, “The Consolations of Religion in Turkey” in Aspects of Religion in Secular Turkey, ed. Malcolm Wagstaff (Durham: University of Durham Centre for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies, 1990), 16-8.
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CHAPTER III
HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF THE PROBLEMATIC ISSUES
This chapter gives an account of how ideologization and in Heper’s words
“bureaucratization” of Kemalism occurred in the issues that are subject to the EU
conditionality and that are the most important cases where ideologization of
Kemalism revealed itself in the course of time. These issues are the Kurdish
question, the Alevi question, the role of the military in Turkish politics, and limiting
sovereignty that is directly linked to the EU membership. This chapter reviews the
evolution of these issues, with special emphasis on the early Republican period and
aftermath of the 1980 coup, so as to reveal the rupture from Kemalist outlook after
the 1980 coup.
3.1 Historical Evolution of the Kurdish Question
3.1.1 Genesis of the issue
The end of World War I had detrimental effects on the Central states that
lost the war. Germany and Austria were driven into political and economic chaos by
harsh peace settlements. Ottoman Empire also shared this fate, Allied powers were
seeking to divide Ottoman land according to secret wartime agreements they had
made.
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According to those secret wartime agreements, all Ottoman land except
Central Anatolia and Black Sea coasts were to be shared by Britain, France and
Russia; and Mudros armistice that was signed in 1918 gave Allied powers the pretext
they needed to start the invasion. However, the Bolshevik revolution toppled the
empire in Russia and a Soviet government was formed. Newly formed Soviet
government gave up on their claims over Southeastern Anatolia and revealed the
secret wartime agreements. British and French decision to stick to the original
agreements led to conflicts in Southeastern Anatolia, since Russian withdrawal
brought to surface the conflicting interests in the region as to who would be in
control. Paris Peace Conference (18 January 1919) turned out to be an arena for these
rival groups. Two groups bear relatively more importance with regard to the basic
direction of this thesis: the Armenians, and the Kurds.
The Armenians and the Kurds were after the same goal of having total
control over Southeastern Anatolia. Armenians had a stronger voice during the Peace
Conference since Kurdish tribes were fragmented. Some Kurdish tribes were
enchanted by the Istanbul government’s promise of full autonomy; and some tribes
maintained their silence by Mustafa Kemal’s offer to grant them equality within the
new Turkish state that he was creating in return for their loyalty to the Empire’s
territorial integrity.64 Thus, Kurdish areas in Southern Caucassus, Iraq and Eastern
Anatolia “were being inexorably divided by the Peace Conference to satisfy
everyone except the Kurds.”65 Urumiye area was being incorporated to Iran, and
Mosul, Arbil, Suleymaniye and Kirkuk were being annexed to the British mandate of
Iraq, with all their Kurdish population.
64 Stanford Shaw, From Empire to Republic, vol.2 (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 2000), 385. 65 Shaw, From Empire, 743.
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In order to succeed in these plans, the British politicians had to garner
support from those Kurdish tribes who were to be incorporated into Iraq. Therefore,
British intelligence started to provoke these tribes no later than March 1919, by
touching upon their nationalist feelings and arousing aspirations of an independent
Kurdish state. In the meantime Mustafa Kemal was very well aware that making a
distinction between ‘Kurdish regions’ and ‘Turkish regions’ and establishing an
independent Kurdish state over those so-called ‘Kurdish regions’ would have borne
disastrous effects on the Turkish national struggle, since such an arrangement would
divide the territory that was to be defended by the Turkish militias as a part of the
National Pact. He was trying to place emphasis on the unmanageability of
establishing and governing an independent Kurdish state in the region, since it was
impossible to distinguish Kurdish populated areas from Turkish populated areas. In a
telegram he sent to Kamil, a Kurdish deputy in the Ottoman parliament, Mustafa
Kemal expressed his resentment from the disputes between the Turks and the Kurds
in Diyarbekir, and he said that such incidents would be harmful to both “brothers-in-
race.”66 At that time Mustafa Kemal’s basic aim was to “include them [the Kurds]
within the melting pot of a common Turkish, Muslim nationality.”67
Kurdish tribes’ attitude towards the liberation movement was quite
fragmented during the period. The basic motive of the Kurdish tribes who supported
Turkish national liberation movement was their fear of an independent Armenian
state coming into being in Southeastern Anatolia. When Şerif Pasha, who was the
Kurdish representative to the Paris Peace Conference, concluded an agreement with
the Armenians and gave up a large part of Southeastern Anatolia to the Armenians,
66 ATASE, Atatürk Özel Arşivinden Seçmeler, Vol.IV, (Ankara: Genelkurmay Basımevi, 1996), 14, quoted in Andrew Mango, “Atatürk and the Kurds,” Middle Eastern Studies, Vol.35, No.4 (October 1999), 6. 67 ATASE, Atatürk Özel, 744.
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many Kurdish tribes’ involvement in the national struggle intensified.68 Besides
Mustafa Kemal himself and Kazım Karabekir, who was the commander of the 15th
army corps located in Erzurum, succeeded in ensuring some Kurdish tribes’
obedience by offering assistance against Armenian claims over Southeastern
Anatolia. In a telegram he sent to a Diyarbekir notable, Kasım Cemilpaşazade on 11
June 1919, Mustafa Kemal argues that all Muslim components of the society should
cooperate closely to prevent the partition of the Ottoman land, and that he was “in
favor of granting all manner of rights and privileges in order to ensure the attachment
and the prosperity and progress of our Kurdish brothers, on condition that the
Ottoman state is not split up.”69 Apart from their desire to keep the Armenians out of
their region, what unified these groups was their Ottoman patriotism and Islamic
solidarity. The Kurdish support to the National movement was also reflected in the
number of delegates in the Erzurum Congress (23 July-7 August 1919) and in the
Grand National Assembly: 22 of 56 delegates who attended the Erzurum Congress
and 74 deputies in the Grand National Assembly were Kurds.70 This solidarity
among the Turkish and the Kurdish delegates was reflected in the decisions taken in
the Sivas Congress (4-11 September 1919). The Congress agreed upon the need to
prevent establishment of Armenian and Greek states over Ottoman territory, and to
protect Caliphate. Besides, Sivas Congress also proclaimed that “all Islamic elements
living in the abovementioned domains [the Ottoman lands within the armistice lines]
are true brothers, imbued with feelings of mutual respect and sacrifice for each other,
and wholly respectful of racial and social rights and local conditions.”71
68 Kemal Kirişçi and Gareth M. Winrow, The Kurdish Question and Turkey (London: Frank Cass, 1997) 84. 69 ATASE, Atatürk Özel, p. 33, quoted in Mango, “Atatürk,”7. 70 Kirişçi and Winrow, The Kurdish, 79-80. 71 Mango, “Atatürk,”10.
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Some groups, on the other hand, were still being driven by their aspirations
for independence. After the Mudros Armistice was signed and Allied Powers
occupied Istanbul in 30 October 1918, some Kurdish leaders believed that they could
have a share from the dismembered Ottoman Empire with the help of the British.72
For this purpose they reactivated Society for the Rise of Kurdistan, which had been
banned by the Ottoman government. This organization also sponsored many of the
revolts in Kurdish-populated areas after the Turkish Republic was founded. During
the period of 1919-21, four out of a total of 23 uprisings were organized by Kurdish
tribes. The most significant ones were Cemil Çeto, Milli and Koçgiri rebellions.73
Although eventually suppressed, these rebellions were threatening enough to get
Mustafa Kemal and his associates concerned on the Kurdish discontent.
A major debate among the students of Turkish history is on whether
Atatürk had toyed with the idea of granting autonomy to the Kurds or not, after
witnessing the Kurdish discontent reflected in the rebellions. Stanford Shaw gives us
a reliable account of the course of events. He states that Atatürk had expressed such a
view during the İzmit Press Conference on 16 January 1923, but this passage was
censored out of many publications of this press conference. He asserts that both
Mustafa Kemal and The Grand National Assembly had agreed upon Kurdish
autonomy, in a secret speech delivered on 10 February 1922 and on 22 July 1922,
respectively.74 Mango also points to the speech delivered by Mustafa Kemal during
72 Mango, “Atatürk,” 5. 73 Kirişçi and Winrow, The Kurdish, 85. 74 See, Shaw, From Empire, 745. Unlike Robert Olson and David McDowall who argue that the issue of Kurdish autonomy was discussed in a secret session, Andrew Mango suggests that there is no evidence of such secret sessions. However, argues that no evidence of these secret sessions can be found. Mango claims that Olson builds his argument on British documents, which most probably had been taken from Kurdish sources that have no legal validity. Although Mango rejects the possibility of secret sessions to discuss Kurdish autonomy, he still maintains that Atatürk was considering Kurdish autonomy. He delineates that Mustafa Kemal initially had in mind the idea of Kurdish autonomy before he aimed at consolidating his rule starting at 1923. See Mango, “Atatürk,” 14-6.
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the İzmit Press Conference as a signal of his plans with regard to granting autonomy
to the Kurdish populated areas. The crux of the speech lies in the following sentence:
As a result, wherever the population of a district is Kurdish, it will govern itself autonomously. Aside from this, whenever one speaks of the people of Turkey [Türkiye’nin halkı], they [the Kurds] should also be included…Now, the Turkish Grand National Assembly is made up of empowered representatives both of Turks and of Kurds, and the two elements have joined their interests and destinies.75
This indulgent attitude towards the Kurdish speaking community was
displayed in the Articles 38-43 of Lausanne Treaty (24 July 1923) as well. Article
39/4 states that
No restrictions shall be imposed on the free use by any Turkish national of any language in private intercourse, in commerce, religion, in the press, or in publications of any kind or at public meetings.76
Similarly, Article 39/5 guarantees the right to oral use of languages other
than Turkish before the courts for Turkish citizens speaking a language other than
Turkish.77
Mustafa Kemal’s references to the multiethnic character of the people of
Turkey, the distinctiveness of the ethnicities living side by side and the need of
Kurdish self governance can be traced in many of his speeches delivered from the
beginning of the War of National Liberation until the year of 1923. However, during
the committee meetings to draw up a new constitution, the issue of local government
was not touched upon. The idea of granting Kurdish populated provinces the right to
self-government was shunted. As Suna Kili suggests, “there was very little
75 Mango, “Atatürk,” 16. 76 Treaty of Peace with Turkey, and Other Instruments Signed at Lausanne on July 24, 1923, Section III, Article 39/4. 77 Treaty of Peace with Turkey, and Other Instruments Signed at Lausanne on July 24, 1923, Section III, Article 39/5.
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discussion on the section of the Constitution which was devoted to the administration
of the provinces.”78
Andrew Mango identifies the reason behind this step back in Mustafa
Kemal’s vision regarding the Kurdish autonomy as a change of priorities.79 He
correctly argues that Mustafa Kemal had to wield absolute power so as to create a
secular and modern Republic, and any kind of devolution of power would have led to
the failure of his plans to wipe off traces of the Caliphate and Sultanate and to
establish a Republic that has an eye on the level of contemporary civilization. In
Atatürk’s words, “sovereignty that rests on guns must only be a temporary expedient
in a time of upheaval”80 and this was the time for it. Atatürk had many rivals from
inside the country: there was a liberal opposition that assumed transition to multi-
party politics would follow the defeat of the Greek; there was a substantial amount of
people, who had fought for independence but would resent abolition of the Caliphate;
and there were perilous rivalries between Atatürk and his colleagues.
Şeyh Sait rebellion came at a time when Atatürk’s Republican People’s
Party was being challenged by a vocal opposition.81 The reasons behind this rebellion
were diverse, a reaction to the centralization of governance, rise of Kurdish
nationalism, and opposition to abolition of the Caliphate. The designs to create a
secular state were bound to be contrary to the vital cement that was uniting the
Kurdish tribes and the nationalist movement. Since the most important commonality
between them was the desire to save the Caliphate, Mustafa Kemal’s plans were
inevitably going to lead to a division within the cooperators of the War of National 78 Suna Kili, Assembly Debates on the Constitutions of 1924 and 1961 (İstanbul: Robert College Research Center,1971), 60. 79 There are other accounts on the issue, which argue that the Kurdish question was dropped off the agenda as soon as the War of National Liberation ended. However, as Mango suggests, this does not explain the opposition’s silence regarding the promises of self-government that Mustafa Kemal had made during the War of National Liberation. See Mango, “Atatürk,” 18-9. 80 As quoted in Lewis, The Emergence, 239. 81 William Hale, Turkish Politics and the Military (London: Routledge, 1994), 66-7.
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Liberation. Draconian measures were taken to suppress the rebellion of the Kurdish
Şeyh Sait and a “Confirmation of Tranquility Law” was enacted in March 1925,
which gave the government stringent powers against any actual or potential
opposition.82 In such an environment Atatürk could not have tolerated upheavals
based on ethnicity claims and he chose to suppress any kind of public expressions of
ethnicity. The formulation of the Turkish historical thesis claiming that all
civilizations had taken their roots from the Turkish people and a heavy cultural
assimilation policy came along with the growing need to assume authority. This need
led to the incorporation of nationalism by the Republican elite in the RPP program,
which was to become the state ideology during the following decades.
Thus, it can be said that the principal goal was to impose self-consciousness
through an identity based on citizenship rather than religion. Once a nation state is
formed, traditional modes of governance have to be abandoned in order to compete
and successfully operate in a system of other nation-states. Thus, as it was in the
Turkish case, nation building is accompanied with political development, which was
the ultimate goal of Mustafa Kemal.
By the 1950s, policies of single-party period started to bear fruit and
Turkish society had started to become relatively modernized. Alongside the society
as a whole, Kurdish population had also started to become well aware of their
ethnicity, and they started to politicize as well. During the Democrat Party (DP) rule
between 1950 and 1960 relatively liberal policies were adopted, and this liberal
posture started to relax the strict assimilation policies of the single-party period.83
DP rule initially ushered in a relatively more liberal period in terms of both economic
and political liberalization, and this period brought about new chances for the Kurds 82 Hale, Turkish Politics, 69. 83 Henri J. Barkey and Graham E. Fuller, “Turkey’s Kurdish Question: Critical Turning Points and Missed Opportunities,” Middle East Journal, 51:1 (1997), 64-5.
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to express their grievances. Even the 1960 military coup did not retreat from these
liberal policies. Although the military regime tried to adopt assimilation policies such
as replacing Kurdish names of some villages with Turkish ones, the 1961
constitution had a liberal essence and it protected some basic rights such as freedom
of speech and association.84
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, reflections of a Kurdish ethnicity were
even more conspicuous. The New Turkey Party (NTP), most of whose members
were the notables of the Eastern provinces, garnered more than 30 percent of the
votes cast in the Eastern provinces in 1961. The Turkish Workers’ Party (TWP), of
the Marxist left, became the first legally recognized political party that admitted the
existence of a Kurdish People who lives in Eastern Anatolia.85
Kurdish population was usually in close cooperation with Marxist or leftist
oriented organizations and parties. The basic reason behind this cooperation was
these organizations’ and parties’ recognition of the Kurdish reality. These
organizations and political parties were further arguing that the economic
backwardness of Eastern Anatolia was caused by the capitalist policies carried out
hand in hand with policies that denied Kurdish identity. It was this convergence in
their views that led to the emergence of many Marxist oriented Kurdish separatist
groups during the 1970s.86 The most important one of them was the Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK), which organized its first congress in 1977 at Diyarbakır.
Their activities came to an abrupt halt due to the 1980 military coup, but were
resumed in 1984.
84 Barkey and Fuller, “Turkey’s,”65. 85 Kirişçi and Winrow, The Kurdish, 114. 86 Kirişçi and Winrow, The Kurdish, 117.
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3.1.2 Aftermath of the 1980 Military Coup
After the 1960s and 1970s, when Kurdish ethnicity was by and large
coming to the surface, came the 1980 military coup. The new military regime
decided to impose Kemalism in the way they had perceived it. As Barkey and Fuller
put, “the military regime which seized power in 1980 instituted some of the most
regressive and repressive policies towards the Kurds.”87 They started to place
emphasis on the indivisibility and uniformity of the nation, and on the ‘Turkishness’
of the people.88 The 1982 Constitution was also symbolizing the staunch resistance
against any reflection of Kurdishness. According to Article 26 of the Constitution,
“no language prohibited by law shall be used in the expression and dissemination of
thought”89 and in 1983 a law that prohibited the use of Kurdish language was
enacted. Article 134 reinstitutionalizes the Turkish Language Society [Türk Dil
Kurumu] and the Turkish History Society [Türk Tarih Kurumu]. Arguments that a
distinct Kurdish language was fictive, that the Turks and the Kurds had the same
ancestors, and that ‘Kurd’ is a name given to mountain Turks, started to be heard
frequently. But none of these measures sufficed to prevent further crystallization of a
Kurdish ethnic identity.
In the early 1990s, firm grip on the Kurdish issue had started to ease. The
most important developments took place during the presidency of Turgut Özal.
Turgut Özal, who had declared that he had Kurdish roots, was in favor of a more
liberal policy towards the Kurdish issue and enhanced dialogue between the parties.
He had ground breaking proposals as early as 1